Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures reach 25C on Sunday beating the 15C average for mid-October.
On Monday some areas of the UK will be hit with winds of up to 80mph (128km/h).
The hurricane will be a storm when it hits the UK, exactly 30 years after the Great Storm of 1987 killed 18 people.
On its way from the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean, Hurricane Ophelia has set the record for the most eastern category three hurricane in the Atlantic.
WesternEngland, Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland will be most affected by the storm winds.
The Republic of Ireland's Met Office has issued a red warning for counties in Munster and Connacht, predicting that coastal areas will be hit by winds in excess of 80mph (130km/h) from 09:00 BST on Monday until Tuesday.
The ferocity of the hurricane will dissipate before it reaches the UK, but Ophelia's remnants are forecast to bring high winds in coastal areas.
hurricane, hurricane ophelia, hurricane ophelia 2017, hurricane ophelia coverage, weather, ophelia
hurricane,ophelia,ireland,hurricane ophelia,toward,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,we are kings music channel,weather,Powerful ''Hurricane Ophelia'' Hits ''Ireland'' ''Europe'' ''UK United Kingdom '' OCTOBER,hurricane,hurricane ophelia,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,weather,ophelia
Hurricane Ophelia Hits Ireland Europe UK United Kingdom - StormOuraganThe Azores10/14/2017!!!

published:15 Oct 2017

views:23493

This is an example of the Irish Language spoken with true effortless speed.Put up to show friends why many people find it difficult to speak the language as it is quite different to English, French, Spanish or Italian.

published:17 Jul 2009

views:718151

The most powerful storm to have ever been this far east in the Atlantic on record is about to hit Ireland.
Met Éireann is warning that ex-Hurricane Ophelia is likely to be the most severe weather event to hit the country in over 50 years.
A red alert wind warning has been issued for the entire country. Separate orange and yellow rainfall warnings have been issued also.
The storm is expected to make landfall in Co Kerry at around 6am and track slowly northwards across the country during the day although all forecasts are subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
Some of the heaviest rainfall accumulations tomorrow are expected to be in Connacht and parts of west Ulster and west Munster.
The western coastal counties of Galway, Mayo and Silgo are among those facing some of the some of the highest rainfall while the most powerful winds are forecast to hit the west early on Monday afternoon..

published:15 Oct 2017

views:1205

This video is published at http://eduvids.blogspot.com. Title: Talking about the weather or 'Ag labhairt faoin aimsir'. Irish lesson about the weather.

Éire

Etymology

The modern Irish Éire evolved from the Old Irish word Ériu, which was the name of a Gaelic goddess. Ériu is generally believed to have been the matron goddess of Ireland, a goddess of sovereignty, or simply a goddess of the land. The origin of Ériu has been traced to the Proto-Celtic reconstruction *Φīwerjon- (nominative singular Φīwerjū < Pre-Proto-Celtic -jō). This suggests a descent from the Proto-Indo-European reconstruction *piHwerjon-, likely related to the adjectival stem *piHwer- (cf. Sanskritpīvan, pīvarī and pīvara meaning "fat, full, abounding"). This would suggest a meaning of "abundant land".

This Proto-Celtic form became Īweriū or Īveriū in Proto-Goidelic. It is highly likely that explorers borrowed and modified this term. During his exploration of northwest Europe (circa 320 BC), Pytheas of Massilia called the island Ierne (written Ἰέρνη). In his book Geographia (circa 150 AD), Claudius Ptolemaeus called the island Iouernia (written Ἰουερνία). Based on these historical accounts, the Roman Empire called the island Hibernia.

The island's geography comprises relatively low-lying mountains surrounding a central plain, with several navigable rivers extending inland. The island has lush vegetation, a product of its mild but changeable climate which avoids extremes in temperature. Thick woodlands covered the island until the Middle Ages. As of 2013, the amount of land that is wooded in Ireland is about 11% of the total, compared with a European average of 35%. There are 26 extant mammal species native to Ireland. The Irish climate is very moderated and classified as oceanic. As a result, winters are milder than expected for such a northerly area. However, summers are cooler than those in Continental Europe. Rainfall and cloud cover are abundant.

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures reach 25C on Sunday beating the 15C average for mid-October.
On Monday some areas of the UK will be hit with winds of up to 80mph (128km/h).
The hurricane will be a storm when it hits the UK, exactly 30 years after the Great Storm of 1987 killed 18 people.
On its way from the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean, Hurricane Ophelia has set the record for the most eastern category three hurricane in the Atlantic.
WesternEngland, Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland will be most affected by the storm winds.
The Republic of Ireland's Met Office has issued a red warning for counties in Munster and Connacht, predicting that coastal areas will be hit by winds in excess of 80mph (130km/h) from 09:00 BST on Monday until Tuesday.
The ferocity of the hurricane will dissipate before it reaches the UK, but Ophelia's remnants are forecast to bring high winds in coastal areas.
hurricane, hurricane ophelia, hurricane ophelia 2017, hurricane ophelia coverage, weather, ophelia
hurricane,ophelia,ireland,hurricane ophelia,toward,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,we are kings music channel,weather,Powerful ''Hurricane Ophelia'' Hits ''Ireland'' ''Europe'' ''UK United Kingdom '' OCTOBER,hurricane,hurricane ophelia,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,weather,ophelia
Hurricane Ophelia Hits Ireland Europe UK United Kingdom - StormOuraganThe Azores10/14/2017!!!

This is an example of the Irish Language spoken with true effortless speed.Put up to show friends why many people find it difficult to speak the language as it is quite different to English, French, Spanish or Italian.

3:22

Hurricane Ophelia, Ireland Here’s What You Need to Know

Hurricane Ophelia, Ireland Here’s What You Need to Know

Hurricane Ophelia, Ireland Here’s What You Need to Know

The most powerful storm to have ever been this far east in the Atlantic on record is about to hit Ireland.
Met Éireann is warning that ex-Hurricane Ophelia is likely to be the most severe weather event to hit the country in over 50 years.
A red alert wind warning has been issued for the entire country. Separate orange and yellow rainfall warnings have been issued also.
The storm is expected to make landfall in Co Kerry at around 6am and track slowly northwards across the country during the day although all forecasts are subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
Some of the heaviest rainfall accumulations tomorrow are expected to be in Connacht and parts of west Ulster and west Munster.
The western coastal counties of Galway, Mayo and Silgo are among those facing some of the some of the highest rainfall while the most powerful winds are forecast to hit the west early on Monday afternoon..

1:33

Learning Irish: the weather

Learning Irish: the weather

Learning Irish: the weather

This video is published at http://eduvids.blogspot.com. Title: Talking about the weather or 'Ag labhairt faoin aimsir'. Irish lesson about the weather.

Hurricane Ophelia is due to make landfall in Ireland on Monday and is predicted to be one of the worst storms in more than 50 years.
Met Éireann has issued a red weather alert for eight counties, as well as less serious status orange and status yellow warnings for other counties.
The strongest and most damaging winds are now forecasted to affect Munster and Leinster, particularly the southwest and Irish Sea coasts.
The heaviest rainfall accumulations will be in Connacht, west Ulster and west Munster, though this is all subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
The status red warning, which is the highest level of warning, will affect counties Wexford, Galway, Mayo, Clare, Cork, Kerry, Limerick and Waterford.
All schools in those counties have been told by the Department of Education to remain closed on Monday.
Counties Galway and Mayo will be the worst affected areas in Connacht as they remain under the status red wind warning.
All schools in Co Galway and Co Mayo will be closed while gusts in excess of 130km/h are expected.
Counties Leitrim, Roscommon and Sligo are all under the less serious status orange wind warning, which will see average wind speeds of between 65km/h and 80km/h as well as gusts of between 110km/h and 130km/h.

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures re...

This is an example of the Irish Language spoken with true effortless speed.Put up to show friends why many people find it difficult to speak the language as it is quite different to English, French, Spanish or Italian.

published: 17 Jul 2009

Hurricane Ophelia, Ireland Here’s What You Need to Know

The most powerful storm to have ever been this far east in the Atlantic on record is about to hit Ireland.
Met Éireann is warning that ex-Hurricane Ophelia is likely to be the most severe weather event to hit the country in over 50 years.
A red alert wind warning has been issued for the entire country. Separate orange and yellow rainfall warnings have been issued also.
The storm is expected to make landfall in Co Kerry at around 6am and track slowly northwards across the country during the day although all forecasts are subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
Some of the heaviest rainfall accumulations tomorrow are expected to be in Connacht and parts of west Ulster and west Munster.
The western coastal counties of Galway, Mayo and Silgo are among those facing so...

published: 15 Oct 2017

Learning Irish: the weather

This video is published at http://eduvids.blogspot.com. Title: Talking about the weather or 'Ag labhairt faoin aimsir'. Irish lesson about the weather.

Irish weather

Hurricane Ophelia is due to make landfall in Ireland on Monday and is predicted to be one of the worst storms in more than 50 years.
Met Éireann has issued a red weather alert for eight counties, as well as less serious status orange and status yellow warnings for other counties.
The strongest and most damaging winds are now forecasted to affect Munster and Leinster, particularly the southwest and Irish Sea coasts.
The heaviest rainfall accumulations will be in Connacht, west Ulster and west Munster, though this is all subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
The status red warning, which is the highest level of warning, will affect counties Wexford, Galway, Mayo, Clare, Cork, Kerry, Limerick and Waterford.
All schools in those counties have been told by the Depa...

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its pat...

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures reach 25C on Sunday beating the 15C average for mid-October.
On Monday some areas of the UK will be hit with winds of up to 80mph (128km/h).
The hurricane will be a storm when it hits the UK, exactly 30 years after the Great Storm of 1987 killed 18 people.
On its way from the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean, Hurricane Ophelia has set the record for the most eastern category three hurricane in the Atlantic.
WesternEngland, Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland will be most affected by the storm winds.
The Republic of Ireland's Met Office has issued a red warning for counties in Munster and Connacht, predicting that coastal areas will be hit by winds in excess of 80mph (130km/h) from 09:00 BST on Monday until Tuesday.
The ferocity of the hurricane will dissipate before it reaches the UK, but Ophelia's remnants are forecast to bring high winds in coastal areas.
hurricane, hurricane ophelia, hurricane ophelia 2017, hurricane ophelia coverage, weather, ophelia
hurricane,ophelia,ireland,hurricane ophelia,toward,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,we are kings music channel,weather,Powerful ''Hurricane Ophelia'' Hits ''Ireland'' ''Europe'' ''UK United Kingdom '' OCTOBER,hurricane,hurricane ophelia,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,weather,ophelia
Hurricane Ophelia Hits Ireland Europe UK United Kingdom - StormOuraganThe Azores10/14/2017!!!

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures reach 25C on Sunday beating the 15C average for mid-October.
On Monday some areas of the UK will be hit with winds of up to 80mph (128km/h).
The hurricane will be a storm when it hits the UK, exactly 30 years after the Great Storm of 1987 killed 18 people.
On its way from the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean, Hurricane Ophelia has set the record for the most eastern category three hurricane in the Atlantic.
WesternEngland, Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland will be most affected by the storm winds.
The Republic of Ireland's Met Office has issued a red warning for counties in Munster and Connacht, predicting that coastal areas will be hit by winds in excess of 80mph (130km/h) from 09:00 BST on Monday until Tuesday.
The ferocity of the hurricane will dissipate before it reaches the UK, but Ophelia's remnants are forecast to bring high winds in coastal areas.
hurricane, hurricane ophelia, hurricane ophelia 2017, hurricane ophelia coverage, weather, ophelia
hurricane,ophelia,ireland,hurricane ophelia,toward,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,we are kings music channel,weather,Powerful ''Hurricane Ophelia'' Hits ''Ireland'' ''Europe'' ''UK United Kingdom '' OCTOBER,hurricane,hurricane ophelia,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,weather,ophelia
Hurricane Ophelia Hits Ireland Europe UK United Kingdom - StormOuraganThe Azores10/14/2017!!!

This is an example of the Irish Language spoken with true effortless speed.Put up to show friends why many people find it difficult to speak the language as it ...

This is an example of the Irish Language spoken with true effortless speed.Put up to show friends why many people find it difficult to speak the language as it is quite different to English, French, Spanish or Italian.

This is an example of the Irish Language spoken with true effortless speed.Put up to show friends why many people find it difficult to speak the language as it is quite different to English, French, Spanish or Italian.

The most powerful storm to have ever been this far east in the Atlantic on record is about to hit Ireland.
Met Éireann is warning that ex-Hurricane Ophelia is likely to be the most severe weather event to hit the country in over 50 years.
A red alert wind warning has been issued for the entire country. Separate orange and yellow rainfall warnings have been issued also.
The storm is expected to make landfall in Co Kerry at around 6am and track slowly northwards across the country during the day although all forecasts are subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
Some of the heaviest rainfall accumulations tomorrow are expected to be in Connacht and parts of west Ulster and west Munster.
The western coastal counties of Galway, Mayo and Silgo are among those facing some of the some of the highest rainfall while the most powerful winds are forecast to hit the west early on Monday afternoon..

The most powerful storm to have ever been this far east in the Atlantic on record is about to hit Ireland.
Met Éireann is warning that ex-Hurricane Ophelia is likely to be the most severe weather event to hit the country in over 50 years.
A red alert wind warning has been issued for the entire country. Separate orange and yellow rainfall warnings have been issued also.
The storm is expected to make landfall in Co Kerry at around 6am and track slowly northwards across the country during the day although all forecasts are subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
Some of the heaviest rainfall accumulations tomorrow are expected to be in Connacht and parts of west Ulster and west Munster.
The western coastal counties of Galway, Mayo and Silgo are among those facing some of the some of the highest rainfall while the most powerful winds are forecast to hit the west early on Monday afternoon..

Hurricane Ophelia is due to make landfall in Ireland on Monday and is predicted to be one of the worst storms in more than 50 years.
Met Éireann has issued a red weather alert for eight counties, as well as less serious status orange and status yellow warnings for other counties.
The strongest and most damaging winds are now forecasted to affect Munster and Leinster, particularly the southwest and Irish Sea coasts.
The heaviest rainfall accumulations will be in Connacht, west Ulster and west Munster, though this is all subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
The status red warning, which is the highest level of warning, will affect counties Wexford, Galway, Mayo, Clare, Cork, Kerry, Limerick and Waterford.
All schools in those counties have been told by the Department of Education to remain closed on Monday.
Counties Galway and Mayo will be the worst affected areas in Connacht as they remain under the status red wind warning.
All schools in Co Galway and Co Mayo will be closed while gusts in excess of 130km/h are expected.
Counties Leitrim, Roscommon and Sligo are all under the less serious status orange wind warning, which will see average wind speeds of between 65km/h and 80km/h as well as gusts of between 110km/h and 130km/h.

Hurricane Ophelia is due to make landfall in Ireland on Monday and is predicted to be one of the worst storms in more than 50 years.
Met Éireann has issued a red weather alert for eight counties, as well as less serious status orange and status yellow warnings for other counties.
The strongest and most damaging winds are now forecasted to affect Munster and Leinster, particularly the southwest and Irish Sea coasts.
The heaviest rainfall accumulations will be in Connacht, west Ulster and west Munster, though this is all subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
The status red warning, which is the highest level of warning, will affect counties Wexford, Galway, Mayo, Clare, Cork, Kerry, Limerick and Waterford.
All schools in those counties have been told by the Department of Education to remain closed on Monday.
Counties Galway and Mayo will be the worst affected areas in Connacht as they remain under the status red wind warning.
All schools in Co Galway and Co Mayo will be closed while gusts in excess of 130km/h are expected.
Counties Leitrim, Roscommon and Sligo are all under the less serious status orange wind warning, which will see average wind speeds of between 65km/h and 80km/h as well as gusts of between 110km/h and 130km/h.

Amhrán na bhFiann - Karaoke Version

published: 18 Feb 2017

Women of Ireland - Ceoltóirí - with Irish Lyrics & Landscapes

"Women of Ireland", or "Mná na h-Éireann" in Irish, is a beautiful song composed by Seán Ó Riada (1931--1971). The poem, on which the music is based, was written by Peadar Ó Dornín (?1704--1769), This video features the Gaelic lyrics. Below is an English translation, though there are variations (only the first two verses are sung in this version):
There's a woman in Erin who'd give me shelter and my fill of ale;
There's a woman in Ireland who'd prefer my strains to strings being played;
There's a woman in Erin and nothing would please her more
Than to see me burning or in a grave lying cold.
There's a woman in Erin who'd be mad with envy if I was kissed
By another on fair-day, they have strange ways, but I love them all;
There are women I'll always adore, battalions of women a...

Mary Black - Song for Ireland

Walking all the day, near tall towers where falcons build their nests
Siver winged they fly, they know the call of freedom in their breasts
SoarBlack Head against the sky, between the rocks that run down to the sea
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets, asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for IrelandTalking all the day with true friends, who try to make you stay
Telling jokes and news, singing songs to pass the night away
Watched the Galway salmon run like silver dancing darting in the sun
Living on your western shore saw summer sunsets, asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for Ireland
Drinking all the day in old pubs, where fiddlers love to play
Someone touched the bow, he played a reel, it seemed so fine and ga...

"Women of Ireland", or "Mná na h-Éireann" in Irish, is a beautiful song composed by Seán Ó Riada (1931--1971). The poem, on which the music is based, was written by Peadar Ó Dornín (?1704--1769), This video features the Gaelic lyrics. Below is an English translation, though there are variations (only the first two verses are sung in this version):
There's a woman in Erin who'd give me shelter and my fill of ale;
There's a woman in Ireland who'd prefer my strains to strings being played;
There's a woman in Erin and nothing would please her more
Than to see me burning or in a grave lying cold.
There's a woman in Erin who'd be mad with envy if I was kissed
By another on fair-day, they have strange ways, but I love them all;
There are women I'll always adore, battalions of women and more
And there's this sensuous beauty and she shackled to an ugly boar.
There's a woman who promised if I'd wander with her I'd find some gold
A woman in night dress with a loveliness worth more than the woman
Who vexed Ballymoyer and the plain of Tyrone;
And the only cure for my pain I'm sure is the ale-house down the road.

"Women of Ireland", or "Mná na h-Éireann" in Irish, is a beautiful song composed by Seán Ó Riada (1931--1971). The poem, on which the music is based, was written by Peadar Ó Dornín (?1704--1769), This video features the Gaelic lyrics. Below is an English translation, though there are variations (only the first two verses are sung in this version):
There's a woman in Erin who'd give me shelter and my fill of ale;
There's a woman in Ireland who'd prefer my strains to strings being played;
There's a woman in Erin and nothing would please her more
Than to see me burning or in a grave lying cold.
There's a woman in Erin who'd be mad with envy if I was kissed
By another on fair-day, they have strange ways, but I love them all;
There are women I'll always adore, battalions of women and more
And there's this sensuous beauty and she shackled to an ugly boar.
There's a woman who promised if I'd wander with her I'd find some gold
A woman in night dress with a loveliness worth more than the woman
Who vexed Ballymoyer and the plain of Tyrone;
And the only cure for my pain I'm sure is the ale-house down the road.

Mary Black - Song for Ireland

Walking all the day, near tall towers where falcons build their nests
Siver winged they fly, they know the call of freedom in their breasts
SoarBlack Head ag...

Walking all the day, near tall towers where falcons build their nests
Siver winged they fly, they know the call of freedom in their breasts
SoarBlack Head against the sky, between the rocks that run down to the sea
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets, asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for IrelandTalking all the day with true friends, who try to make you stay
Telling jokes and news, singing songs to pass the night away
Watched the Galway salmon run like silver dancing darting in the sun
Living on your western shore saw summer sunsets, asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for Ireland
Drinking all the day in old pubs, where fiddlers love to play
Someone touched the bow, he played a reel, it seemed so fine and gay
Stood on Dingle beach and cast - in wild foam we found Atlantic Bass
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for Ireland
Dreaming in the night, I saw a land where no man had to fight
Waking in your dawn, I saw you crying in the morning light
Lying where the Falcons fly, they twist and turn all in you e'er blue sky
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and I sang a song for Ireland

Walking all the day, near tall towers where falcons build their nests
Siver winged they fly, they know the call of freedom in their breasts
SoarBlack Head against the sky, between the rocks that run down to the sea
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets, asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for IrelandTalking all the day with true friends, who try to make you stay
Telling jokes and news, singing songs to pass the night away
Watched the Galway salmon run like silver dancing darting in the sun
Living on your western shore saw summer sunsets, asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for Ireland
Drinking all the day in old pubs, where fiddlers love to play
Someone touched the bow, he played a reel, it seemed so fine and gay
Stood on Dingle beach and cast - in wild foam we found Atlantic Bass
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for Ireland
Dreaming in the night, I saw a land where no man had to fight
Waking in your dawn, I saw you crying in the morning light
Lying where the Falcons fly, they twist and turn all in you e'er blue sky
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and I sang a song for Ireland

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures re...

published: 15 Oct 2017

Irish Weather Online - New World Order Collaborators.

IrishWeatherOnline are on facebook and also have a website. Hundreds of well meaning people visit their facebook page everyday to get the daily weather forecast. This video was made for the purpose of waking people up to the true nature of this criminal NWO operation.
The article from this video :
http://irishweatheronline.wordpress.com/2013/09/08/contrails-v-chemtrails-the-science-that-debunks-the-conspiracy/
GEOENGINEERING documents to reference :
Owning the weather by 2025 :
http://csat.au.af.mil/2025/volume3/vol3ch15.pdfHouse of commons regulations on Geoengineering :
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/221/221.pdf
Aurora flight sciences : http://www.keith.seas.harvard.edu/Misc/AuroraGeoReport.pdf
Welsbach Patent:
http://www.scribd.com/do...

published: 14 May 2014

Sea Kayaking Skye 2016 - Elgol.

So here it is, the first proper paddle of the outing, and it was a stunner. This place is really something else, can't think of anywhere in the UK like this, perhaps The Slieve League, but that is in Eire. The weather was fantastic............right up until we launched!! It was a choppy ride over, and even more choppy coming back, but this Cetus is absolutely made for me, and I can take much more of the choppy stuff now. The first thing you realise, when you do this paddle, is the amount of time it takes to reach the head of the Sea loch. The scale of the place is staggering, and you begin to wonder if something is holding you back, it isn't, it's just Mother Nature, and Physics and stuff. At the head of the Loch, you encounter the river emptying out of Loch Coruisk. It's only a few hundr...

published: 09 Aug 2016

Terry Wogan's Ireland Episode 1

RIPTerry Wogan. 3 August 1938 – 31 January 2016. This documentary, broadcast in 2011, takes on a new poignancy now. Enjoy.
It is over 40 years since Terry Wogan decided to leave Ireland and seek his fortune across the water in England. In that time, Ireland has changed beyond all recognition - and so has Terry. Now, in the wake of his retirement from BBC Radio 2, Terry's going 'home'.
In the autobiographical journey of a lifetime he travels back to Dublin, the city he left behind as a teenager, and all the way back to Limerick, where he was born, taking in the length and breadth of the heart-stoppingly beautiful Irish coast en route.
For Terry, this is an opportunity to cherish the old, and to seek out and celebrate the new face of Ireland. But this Ireland is a very different country...

A Crone Woods to Djouce Circuit. 21/9/17.

Around 9.5 miles of walking from the car-park at Crone to the 733m summit of Djouce, one of the WicklowHills in Eire, and back.
Up through woods on the Wicklow Way, with great views of Powerscourt Waterfall shortly after, the walker is soon crossing the DargleRiver, near its source, and out into open countryside. There are some wonderful views of the Wicklow coastline and the Irish Sea, prior to the steep ascent of Djouce, which affords even better views of the same, plus those of Lough Tay and the mountains further south.
The walk back was the same, until RideRock, where the walker took another path towards the northern flank of Maulin. Thereafter, it was a different forest path back to the car park.
A very decent walk, aided and abetted by some wonderful weather that was not forecast...

published: 08 Nov 2017

Winning Streak (RTÉ) - 2001

An episode of RTÉ's National Lottery game show, presented by Derek Mooney. The show gave away thousands of pounds in cash, cars and holidays. This episode from 2001 would almost certainly have been one of the last shows that gave their money away in Pounds (or Punts), because the following year saw the start of the Euro as official Eire currency. ALL RELEVANTCOPYRIGHTS ACKNOWLEDGED.

parkrun Bere Island #126 24/12/16

Saturday 24th December 2016
parkrun on Bere Island, County Cork, Ireland.
A particularly interesting parkrun. It involves taking the ferry from Castletown to Bere Island, then a minibus to the start. There are changing facilities at the football club clubhouse. The hilly course has spectacular views to the Sheep's Head Peninsular & Hungry Hill across the wild Atlantic. Drinks are provided at the finish and showers are available in the changing rooms. Afterwards, everybody walks down to Bere Island BakeHouse (in the rear of Murphy's Pub) for hot drinks & cakes. Finally the minibus takes you back to the ferry which then takes you back to Castletown.
The combined return fare on the ferry and minibus is €10.

Given the worsening impacts of global climate change, there is now serious scientific concern that humanity either already has, or shortly will, exceed “safe” concentrations (accumulations) of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere. While the severity of the danger has been recognised in the temperature rise goals now enshrined in the Paris Agreement, the practical consequences have not yet been acknowledged in national or EU energy decarbonisation policies.
There is now a pressing need to understand the potential scope (if any) for technological CO2 removal, and the scale and speed at which it might be achieved: that is, for the deployment of so-called “negative emissions technologies” (NETs).
IE-NETs is a two year research project, funded by the Environmental Protection Agency of Ir...

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its pat...

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures reach 25C on Sunday beating the 15C average for mid-October.
On Monday some areas of the UK will be hit with winds of up to 80mph (128km/h).
The hurricane will be a storm when it hits the UK, exactly 30 years after the Great Storm of 1987 killed 18 people.
On its way from the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean, Hurricane Ophelia has set the record for the most eastern category three hurricane in the Atlantic.
WesternEngland, Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland will be most affected by the storm winds.
The Republic of Ireland's Met Office has issued a red warning for counties in Munster and Connacht, predicting that coastal areas will be hit by winds in excess of 80mph (130km/h) from 09:00 BST on Monday until Tuesday.
The ferocity of the hurricane will dissipate before it reaches the UK, but Ophelia's remnants are forecast to bring high winds in coastal areas.
hurricane, hurricane ophelia, hurricane ophelia 2017, hurricane ophelia coverage, weather, ophelia
hurricane,ophelia,ireland,hurricane ophelia,toward,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,we are kings music channel,weather,Powerful ''Hurricane Ophelia'' Hits ''Ireland'' ''Europe'' ''UK United Kingdom '' OCTOBER,hurricane,hurricane ophelia,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,weather,ophelia
Hurricane Ophelia Hits Ireland Europe UK United Kingdom - StormOuraganThe Azores10/14/2017!!!

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures reach 25C on Sunday beating the 15C average for mid-October.
On Monday some areas of the UK will be hit with winds of up to 80mph (128km/h).
The hurricane will be a storm when it hits the UK, exactly 30 years after the Great Storm of 1987 killed 18 people.
On its way from the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean, Hurricane Ophelia has set the record for the most eastern category three hurricane in the Atlantic.
WesternEngland, Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland will be most affected by the storm winds.
The Republic of Ireland's Met Office has issued a red warning for counties in Munster and Connacht, predicting that coastal areas will be hit by winds in excess of 80mph (130km/h) from 09:00 BST on Monday until Tuesday.
The ferocity of the hurricane will dissipate before it reaches the UK, but Ophelia's remnants are forecast to bring high winds in coastal areas.
hurricane, hurricane ophelia, hurricane ophelia 2017, hurricane ophelia coverage, weather, ophelia
hurricane,ophelia,ireland,hurricane ophelia,toward,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,we are kings music channel,weather,Powerful ''Hurricane Ophelia'' Hits ''Ireland'' ''Europe'' ''UK United Kingdom '' OCTOBER,hurricane,hurricane ophelia,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,weather,ophelia
Hurricane Ophelia Hits Ireland Europe UK United Kingdom - StormOuraganThe Azores10/14/2017!!!

Irish Weather Online - New World Order Collaborators.

IrishWeatherOnline are on facebook and also have a website. Hundreds of well meaning people visit their facebook page everyday to get the daily weather foreca...

IrishWeatherOnline are on facebook and also have a website. Hundreds of well meaning people visit their facebook page everyday to get the daily weather forecast. This video was made for the purpose of waking people up to the true nature of this criminal NWO operation.
The article from this video :
http://irishweatheronline.wordpress.com/2013/09/08/contrails-v-chemtrails-the-science-that-debunks-the-conspiracy/
GEOENGINEERING documents to reference :
Owning the weather by 2025 :
http://csat.au.af.mil/2025/volume3/vol3ch15.pdfHouse of commons regulations on Geoengineering :
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/221/221.pdf
Aurora flight sciences : http://www.keith.seas.harvard.edu/Misc/AuroraGeoReport.pdf
Welsbach Patent:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/4296843/US-Patent-5003186-Stratospheric-welsbach-seeding-for-reduction-of-global-warming
Solar Radiation ManagementGovernmentInitiative.
http://www.srmgi.org/files/2012/01/DES2391_SRMGI-report_web_11112.pdf
For Geoengineering flyers to hand out in your area got to:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/189852620/Chemtrail-Flyer-Blk-Whtx4-Eire
The Case For and AgainstClimateEngineering Dec 2nd 2013. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXaxMRyRIlU
List of Geoengineering patents: http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/links-to-geoengineering-patents/
For more information on Geoengineering go to : http://www.uk-skywatch.co.uk/

IrishWeatherOnline are on facebook and also have a website. Hundreds of well meaning people visit their facebook page everyday to get the daily weather forecast. This video was made for the purpose of waking people up to the true nature of this criminal NWO operation.
The article from this video :
http://irishweatheronline.wordpress.com/2013/09/08/contrails-v-chemtrails-the-science-that-debunks-the-conspiracy/
GEOENGINEERING documents to reference :
Owning the weather by 2025 :
http://csat.au.af.mil/2025/volume3/vol3ch15.pdfHouse of commons regulations on Geoengineering :
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/221/221.pdf
Aurora flight sciences : http://www.keith.seas.harvard.edu/Misc/AuroraGeoReport.pdf
Welsbach Patent:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/4296843/US-Patent-5003186-Stratospheric-welsbach-seeding-for-reduction-of-global-warming
Solar Radiation ManagementGovernmentInitiative.
http://www.srmgi.org/files/2012/01/DES2391_SRMGI-report_web_11112.pdf
For Geoengineering flyers to hand out in your area got to:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/189852620/Chemtrail-Flyer-Blk-Whtx4-Eire
The Case For and AgainstClimateEngineering Dec 2nd 2013. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXaxMRyRIlU
List of Geoengineering patents: http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/links-to-geoengineering-patents/
For more information on Geoengineering go to : http://www.uk-skywatch.co.uk/

Sea Kayaking Skye 2016 - Elgol.

So here it is, the first proper paddle of the outing, and it was a stunner. This place is really something else, can't think of anywhere in the UK like this, pe...

So here it is, the first proper paddle of the outing, and it was a stunner. This place is really something else, can't think of anywhere in the UK like this, perhaps The Slieve League, but that is in Eire. The weather was fantastic............right up until we launched!! It was a choppy ride over, and even more choppy coming back, but this Cetus is absolutely made for me, and I can take much more of the choppy stuff now. The first thing you realise, when you do this paddle, is the amount of time it takes to reach the head of the Sea loch. The scale of the place is staggering, and you begin to wonder if something is holding you back, it isn't, it's just Mother Nature, and Physics and stuff. At the head of the Loch, you encounter the river emptying out of Loch Coruisk. It's only a few hundred yards, but is quite boggy in places, but the view is about the best I've seen in the UK so far. The Salty Seadogs, who set out at the same time as us, actually carried their boats right up to paddle Loch Coruisk, and planned to camp out overnight. Don't know how they got on, but I presume, not very well, as a Northerly wind got up, and stayed with us for the next 4 days approaching Gale force at times, then it dropped to nothing as you can witness for yourselves in the upcoming videos.

So here it is, the first proper paddle of the outing, and it was a stunner. This place is really something else, can't think of anywhere in the UK like this, perhaps The Slieve League, but that is in Eire. The weather was fantastic............right up until we launched!! It was a choppy ride over, and even more choppy coming back, but this Cetus is absolutely made for me, and I can take much more of the choppy stuff now. The first thing you realise, when you do this paddle, is the amount of time it takes to reach the head of the Sea loch. The scale of the place is staggering, and you begin to wonder if something is holding you back, it isn't, it's just Mother Nature, and Physics and stuff. At the head of the Loch, you encounter the river emptying out of Loch Coruisk. It's only a few hundred yards, but is quite boggy in places, but the view is about the best I've seen in the UK so far. The Salty Seadogs, who set out at the same time as us, actually carried their boats right up to paddle Loch Coruisk, and planned to camp out overnight. Don't know how they got on, but I presume, not very well, as a Northerly wind got up, and stayed with us for the next 4 days approaching Gale force at times, then it dropped to nothing as you can witness for yourselves in the upcoming videos.

RIPTerry Wogan. 3 August 1938 – 31 January 2016. This documentary, broadcast in 2011, takes on a new poignancy now. Enjoy.
It is over 40 years since Terry Wogan decided to leave Ireland and seek his fortune across the water in England. In that time, Ireland has changed beyond all recognition - and so has Terry. Now, in the wake of his retirement from BBC Radio 2, Terry's going 'home'.
In the autobiographical journey of a lifetime he travels back to Dublin, the city he left behind as a teenager, and all the way back to Limerick, where he was born, taking in the length and breadth of the heart-stoppingly beautiful Irish coast en route.
For Terry, this is an opportunity to cherish the old, and to seek out and celebrate the new face of Ireland. But this Ireland is a very different country to the one he left behind over 40 years ago - the nation now finds itself in the midst of an economic crisis. But as Terry reminds us, Ireland has survived 500 years of oppression, colonisation, religious discrimination, starvation and emigration. The Irish may be down, he concludes, but don't ever count them out.
Terry was born into an enterprising family of shopkeepers. They lived in Dublin and Limerick, the start and end points of the first leg of this journey. By retracing his story, Terry reveals the bigger picture of post-war Ireland - the result is a uniquely personal take on the history of this beautiful but divided land. Terry has rarely talked about his Irish Catholic origins and so, for many, this series will be a revelation.
In a land that invented the gift of the gab, Terry is in his element as he heads out west in the company of his lugubrious driver Dave. En route to the house he grew up in, he discovers a 'moving' statue of the Virgin Mary, suffers bad weather on the Ring of Kerry, and in Tralee he recalls Ireland's Loveliest Ladies competition, as he asks himself what it means to be Irish today.

RIPTerry Wogan. 3 August 1938 – 31 January 2016. This documentary, broadcast in 2011, takes on a new poignancy now. Enjoy.
It is over 40 years since Terry Wogan decided to leave Ireland and seek his fortune across the water in England. In that time, Ireland has changed beyond all recognition - and so has Terry. Now, in the wake of his retirement from BBC Radio 2, Terry's going 'home'.
In the autobiographical journey of a lifetime he travels back to Dublin, the city he left behind as a teenager, and all the way back to Limerick, where he was born, taking in the length and breadth of the heart-stoppingly beautiful Irish coast en route.
For Terry, this is an opportunity to cherish the old, and to seek out and celebrate the new face of Ireland. But this Ireland is a very different country to the one he left behind over 40 years ago - the nation now finds itself in the midst of an economic crisis. But as Terry reminds us, Ireland has survived 500 years of oppression, colonisation, religious discrimination, starvation and emigration. The Irish may be down, he concludes, but don't ever count them out.
Terry was born into an enterprising family of shopkeepers. They lived in Dublin and Limerick, the start and end points of the first leg of this journey. By retracing his story, Terry reveals the bigger picture of post-war Ireland - the result is a uniquely personal take on the history of this beautiful but divided land. Terry has rarely talked about his Irish Catholic origins and so, for many, this series will be a revelation.
In a land that invented the gift of the gab, Terry is in his element as he heads out west in the company of his lugubrious driver Dave. En route to the house he grew up in, he discovers a 'moving' statue of the Virgin Mary, suffers bad weather on the Ring of Kerry, and in Tralee he recalls Ireland's Loveliest Ladies competition, as he asks himself what it means to be Irish today.

A Crone Woods to Djouce Circuit. 21/9/17.

Around 9.5 miles of walking from the car-park at Crone to the 733m summit of Djouce, one of the WicklowHills in Eire, and back.
Up through woods on the Wicklow...

Around 9.5 miles of walking from the car-park at Crone to the 733m summit of Djouce, one of the WicklowHills in Eire, and back.
Up through woods on the Wicklow Way, with great views of Powerscourt Waterfall shortly after, the walker is soon crossing the DargleRiver, near its source, and out into open countryside. There are some wonderful views of the Wicklow coastline and the Irish Sea, prior to the steep ascent of Djouce, which affords even better views of the same, plus those of Lough Tay and the mountains further south.
The walk back was the same, until RideRock, where the walker took another path towards the northern flank of Maulin. Thereafter, it was a different forest path back to the car park.
A very decent walk, aided and abetted by some wonderful weather that was not forecast! With hindsight, it would have been better to include the walk over Maulin, rather than the way it was done today. You live and learn!
N.B. Some wind interference on commentary.

Around 9.5 miles of walking from the car-park at Crone to the 733m summit of Djouce, one of the WicklowHills in Eire, and back.
Up through woods on the Wicklow Way, with great views of Powerscourt Waterfall shortly after, the walker is soon crossing the DargleRiver, near its source, and out into open countryside. There are some wonderful views of the Wicklow coastline and the Irish Sea, prior to the steep ascent of Djouce, which affords even better views of the same, plus those of Lough Tay and the mountains further south.
The walk back was the same, until RideRock, where the walker took another path towards the northern flank of Maulin. Thereafter, it was a different forest path back to the car park.
A very decent walk, aided and abetted by some wonderful weather that was not forecast! With hindsight, it would have been better to include the walk over Maulin, rather than the way it was done today. You live and learn!
N.B. Some wind interference on commentary.

An episode of RTÉ's National Lottery game show, presented by Derek Mooney. The show gave away thousands of pounds in cash, cars and holidays. This episode from 2001 would almost certainly have been one of the last shows that gave their money away in Pounds (or Punts), because the following year saw the start of the Euro as official Eire currency. ALL RELEVANTCOPYRIGHTS ACKNOWLEDGED.

An episode of RTÉ's National Lottery game show, presented by Derek Mooney. The show gave away thousands of pounds in cash, cars and holidays. This episode from 2001 would almost certainly have been one of the last shows that gave their money away in Pounds (or Punts), because the following year saw the start of the Euro as official Eire currency. ALL RELEVANTCOPYRIGHTS ACKNOWLEDGED.

Saturday 24th December 2016
parkrun on Bere Island, County Cork, Ireland.
A particularly interesting parkrun. It involves taking the ferry from Castletown to Bere Island, then a minibus to the start. There are changing facilities at the football club clubhouse. The hilly course has spectacular views to the Sheep's Head Peninsular & Hungry Hill across the wild Atlantic. Drinks are provided at the finish and showers are available in the changing rooms. Afterwards, everybody walks down to Bere Island BakeHouse (in the rear of Murphy's Pub) for hot drinks & cakes. Finally the minibus takes you back to the ferry which then takes you back to Castletown.
The combined return fare on the ferry and minibus is €10.

Saturday 24th December 2016
parkrun on Bere Island, County Cork, Ireland.
A particularly interesting parkrun. It involves taking the ferry from Castletown to Bere Island, then a minibus to the start. There are changing facilities at the football club clubhouse. The hilly course has spectacular views to the Sheep's Head Peninsular & Hungry Hill across the wild Atlantic. Drinks are provided at the finish and showers are available in the changing rooms. Afterwards, everybody walks down to Bere Island BakeHouse (in the rear of Murphy's Pub) for hot drinks & cakes. Finally the minibus takes you back to the ferry which then takes you back to Castletown.
The combined return fare on the ferry and minibus is €10.

Given the worsening impacts of global climate change, there is now serious scientific concern that humanity either already has, or shortly will, exceed “safe” c...

Given the worsening impacts of global climate change, there is now serious scientific concern that humanity either already has, or shortly will, exceed “safe” concentrations (accumulations) of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere. While the severity of the danger has been recognised in the temperature rise goals now enshrined in the Paris Agreement, the practical consequences have not yet been acknowledged in national or EU energy decarbonisation policies.
There is now a pressing need to understand the potential scope (if any) for technological CO2 removal, and the scale and speed at which it might be achieved: that is, for the deployment of so-called “negative emissions technologies” (NETs).
IE-NETs is a two year research project, funded by the Environmental Protection Agency of Ireland (EPA) to provide a preliminary assessment of the potential scale, speed and reliability of negative emissions technology deployment that could be achieved in Ireland.

Given the worsening impacts of global climate change, there is now serious scientific concern that humanity either already has, or shortly will, exceed “safe” concentrations (accumulations) of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere. While the severity of the danger has been recognised in the temperature rise goals now enshrined in the Paris Agreement, the practical consequences have not yet been acknowledged in national or EU energy decarbonisation policies.
There is now a pressing need to understand the potential scope (if any) for technological CO2 removal, and the scale and speed at which it might be achieved: that is, for the deployment of so-called “negative emissions technologies” (NETs).
IE-NETs is a two year research project, funded by the Environmental Protection Agency of Ireland (EPA) to provide a preliminary assessment of the potential scale, speed and reliability of negative emissions technology deployment that could be achieved in Ireland.

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures reach 25C on Sunday beating the 15C average for mid-October.
On Monday some areas of the UK will be hit with winds of up to 80mph (128km/h).
The hurricane will be a storm when it hits the UK, exactly 30 years after the Great Storm of 1987 killed 18 people.
On its way from the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean, Hurricane Ophelia has set the record for the most eastern category three hurricane in the Atlantic.
WesternEngland, Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland will be most affected by the storm winds.
The Republic of Ireland's Met Office has issued a red warning for counties in Munster and Connacht, predicting that coastal areas will be hit by winds in excess of 80mph (130km/h) from 09:00 BST on Monday until Tuesday.
The ferocity of the hurricane will dissipate before it reaches the UK, but Ophelia's remnants are forecast to bring high winds in coastal areas.
hurricane, hurricane ophelia, hurricane ophelia 2017, hurricane ophelia coverage, weather, ophelia
hurricane,ophelia,ireland,hurricane ophelia,toward,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,we are kings music channel,weather,Powerful ''Hurricane Ophelia'' Hits ''Ireland'' ''Europe'' ''UK United Kingdom '' OCTOBER,hurricane,hurricane ophelia,hurricane ophelia 2017,hurricane ophelia coverage,weather,ophelia
Hurricane Ophelia Hits Ireland Europe UK United Kingdom - StormOuraganThe Azores10/14/2017!!!

This is an example of the Irish Language spoken with true effortless speed.Put up to show friends why many people find it difficult to speak the language as it is quite different to English, French, Spanish or Italian.

3:22

Hurricane Ophelia, Ireland Here’s What You Need to Know

The most powerful storm to have ever been this far east in the Atlantic on record is about...

Hurricane Ophelia, Ireland Here’s What You Need to Know

The most powerful storm to have ever been this far east in the Atlantic on record is about to hit Ireland.
Met Éireann is warning that ex-Hurricane Ophelia is likely to be the most severe weather event to hit the country in over 50 years.
A red alert wind warning has been issued for the entire country. Separate orange and yellow rainfall warnings have been issued also.
The storm is expected to make landfall in Co Kerry at around 6am and track slowly northwards across the country during the day although all forecasts are subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
Some of the heaviest rainfall accumulations tomorrow are expected to be in Connacht and parts of west Ulster and west Munster.
The western coastal counties of Galway, Mayo and Silgo are among those facing some of the some of the highest rainfall while the most powerful winds are forecast to hit the west early on Monday afternoon..

1:33

Learning Irish: the weather

This video is published at http://eduvids.blogspot.com. Title: Talking about the weather o...

Hurricane Ophelia is due to make landfall in Ireland on Monday and is predicted to be one of the worst storms in more than 50 years.
Met Éireann has issued a red weather alert for eight counties, as well as less serious status orange and status yellow warnings for other counties.
The strongest and most damaging winds are now forecasted to affect Munster and Leinster, particularly the southwest and Irish Sea coasts.
The heaviest rainfall accumulations will be in Connacht, west Ulster and west Munster, though this is all subject to change as Met Éireann continues to track the storm.
The status red warning, which is the highest level of warning, will affect counties Wexford, Galway, Mayo, Clare, Cork, Kerry, Limerick and Waterford.
All schools in those counties have been told by the Department of Education to remain closed on Monday.
Counties Galway and Mayo will be the worst affected areas in Connacht as they remain under the status red wind warning.
All schools in Co Galway and Co Mayo will be closed while gusts in excess of 130km/h are expected.
Counties Leitrim, Roscommon and Sligo are all under the less serious status orange wind warning, which will see average wind speeds of between 65km/h and 80km/h as well as gusts of between 110km/h and 130km/h.

Women of Ireland - Ceoltóirí - with Irish Lyrics & Landscapes

"Women of Ireland", or "Mná na h-Éireann" in Irish, is a beautiful song composed by Seán Ó Riada (1931--1971). The poem, on which the music is based, was written by Peadar Ó Dornín (?1704--1769), This video features the Gaelic lyrics. Below is an English translation, though there are variations (only the first two verses are sung in this version):
There's a woman in Erin who'd give me shelter and my fill of ale;
There's a woman in Ireland who'd prefer my strains to strings being played;
There's a woman in Erin and nothing would please her more
Than to see me burning or in a grave lying cold.
There's a woman in Erin who'd be mad with envy if I was kissed
By another on fair-day, they have strange ways, but I love them all;
There are women I'll always adore, battalions of women and more
And there's this sensuous beauty and she shackled to an ugly boar.
There's a woman who promised if I'd wander with her I'd find some gold
A woman in night dress with a loveliness worth more than the woman
Who vexed Ballymoyer and the plain of Tyrone;
And the only cure for my pain I'm sure is the ale-house down the road.

Mary Black - Song for Ireland

Walking all the day, near tall towers where falcons build their nests
Siver winged they fly, they know the call of freedom in their breasts
SoarBlack Head against the sky, between the rocks that run down to the sea
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets, asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for IrelandTalking all the day with true friends, who try to make you stay
Telling jokes and news, singing songs to pass the night away
Watched the Galway salmon run like silver dancing darting in the sun
Living on your western shore saw summer sunsets, asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for Ireland
Drinking all the day in old pubs, where fiddlers love to play
Someone touched the bow, he played a reel, it seemed so fine and gay
Stood on Dingle beach and cast - in wild foam we found Atlantic Bass
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and sang a song for Ireland
Dreaming in the night, I saw a land where no man had to fight
Waking in your dawn, I saw you crying in the morning light
Lying where the Falcons fly, they twist and turn all in you e'er blue sky
Living on your western shore, saw summer sunsets asked for more
I stood by your Atlantic sea, and I sang a song for Ireland

3:23

Sigala, Ella Eyre - Came Here for Love

"Came Here For love" by Sigala and Ella Eyre, available now: https://sigala.lnk.to/CHFLyd
...

Record-setting Ophelia, a Category 3 hurricane with sustained winds of 185 kilometers per hour (115 mph), was passing south of the Azores on Saturday on its path toward Ireland.
Ophelia will have big impacts for the British Isles beginning Monday, including hurricane-force winds forecast for Ireland.
The fast-moving storm intensified Saturday.
"The odd part about Ophelia is seeing this intensification take place in what's normally a much cooler region of the Atlantic Ocean," CNN Meteorologist Allison Chinchar said.
Little change in strength is expected Saturday, the US National Hurricane Center said.
The UK is set to experience the tail end of a category three hurricane with high temperatures and wind forecast.
As a result of Hurricane Ophelia, parts of England could see temperatures reach 25C on Sunday beating the 15C average for mid-October.
On Monday some areas of the UK will be hit with winds of up to 80mph (128km/h).
The hurricane will be a storm when it hits the UK, exactly 30 years after the Great Storm of 1987 killed 18 people.
On its way from the Azores in the Atlantic Ocean, Hurricane Ophelia has set the record for the most eastern category three hurricane in the Atlantic.
WesternEngland, Northern Ireland and parts of Scotland will be most affected by the storm winds.
The Republic of Ireland's Met Office has issued a red warning for counties in Munster and Connacht, predicting that coastal areas will be hit by winds in excess of 80mph (130km/h) from 09:00 BST on Monday until Tuesday.
The ferocity of the hurricane will dissipate before it reaches the UK, but Ophelia's remnants are forecast to bring high winds in coastal areas.
hurricane, hurricane ophelia, hurricane ophelia 2017, hurricane ophelia coverage, weather, ophelia
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Hurricane Ophelia Hits Ireland Europe UK United Kingdom - StormOuraganThe Azores10/14/2017!!!

23:08

Irish Weather Online - New World Order Collaborators.

Irish Weather Online are on facebook and also have a website. Hundreds of well meaning peo...

Irish Weather Online - New World Order Collaborators.

IrishWeatherOnline are on facebook and also have a website. Hundreds of well meaning people visit their facebook page everyday to get the daily weather forecast. This video was made for the purpose of waking people up to the true nature of this criminal NWO operation.
The article from this video :
http://irishweatheronline.wordpress.com/2013/09/08/contrails-v-chemtrails-the-science-that-debunks-the-conspiracy/
GEOENGINEERING documents to reference :
Owning the weather by 2025 :
http://csat.au.af.mil/2025/volume3/vol3ch15.pdfHouse of commons regulations on Geoengineering :
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmsctech/221/221.pdf
Aurora flight sciences : http://www.keith.seas.harvard.edu/Misc/AuroraGeoReport.pdf
Welsbach Patent:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/4296843/US-Patent-5003186-Stratospheric-welsbach-seeding-for-reduction-of-global-warming
Solar Radiation ManagementGovernmentInitiative.
http://www.srmgi.org/files/2012/01/DES2391_SRMGI-report_web_11112.pdf
For Geoengineering flyers to hand out in your area got to:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/189852620/Chemtrail-Flyer-Blk-Whtx4-Eire
The Case For and AgainstClimateEngineering Dec 2nd 2013. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXaxMRyRIlU
List of Geoengineering patents: http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/links-to-geoengineering-patents/
For more information on Geoengineering go to : http://www.uk-skywatch.co.uk/

48:02

Sea Kayaking Skye 2016 - Elgol.

So here it is, the first proper paddle of the outing, and it was a stunner. This place is ...

Sea Kayaking Skye 2016 - Elgol.

So here it is, the first proper paddle of the outing, and it was a stunner. This place is really something else, can't think of anywhere in the UK like this, perhaps The Slieve League, but that is in Eire. The weather was fantastic............right up until we launched!! It was a choppy ride over, and even more choppy coming back, but this Cetus is absolutely made for me, and I can take much more of the choppy stuff now. The first thing you realise, when you do this paddle, is the amount of time it takes to reach the head of the Sea loch. The scale of the place is staggering, and you begin to wonder if something is holding you back, it isn't, it's just Mother Nature, and Physics and stuff. At the head of the Loch, you encounter the river emptying out of Loch Coruisk. It's only a few hundred yards, but is quite boggy in places, but the view is about the best I've seen in the UK so far. The Salty Seadogs, who set out at the same time as us, actually carried their boats right up to paddle Loch Coruisk, and planned to camp out overnight. Don't know how they got on, but I presume, not very well, as a Northerly wind got up, and stayed with us for the next 4 days approaching Gale force at times, then it dropped to nothing as you can witness for yourselves in the upcoming videos.

Terry Wogan's Ireland Episode 1

RIPTerry Wogan. 3 August 1938 – 31 January 2016. This documentary, broadcast in 2011, takes on a new poignancy now. Enjoy.
It is over 40 years since Terry Wogan decided to leave Ireland and seek his fortune across the water in England. In that time, Ireland has changed beyond all recognition - and so has Terry. Now, in the wake of his retirement from BBC Radio 2, Terry's going 'home'.
In the autobiographical journey of a lifetime he travels back to Dublin, the city he left behind as a teenager, and all the way back to Limerick, where he was born, taking in the length and breadth of the heart-stoppingly beautiful Irish coast en route.
For Terry, this is an opportunity to cherish the old, and to seek out and celebrate the new face of Ireland. But this Ireland is a very different country to the one he left behind over 40 years ago - the nation now finds itself in the midst of an economic crisis. But as Terry reminds us, Ireland has survived 500 years of oppression, colonisation, religious discrimination, starvation and emigration. The Irish may be down, he concludes, but don't ever count them out.
Terry was born into an enterprising family of shopkeepers. They lived in Dublin and Limerick, the start and end points of the first leg of this journey. By retracing his story, Terry reveals the bigger picture of post-war Ireland - the result is a uniquely personal take on the history of this beautiful but divided land. Terry has rarely talked about his Irish Catholic origins and so, for many, this series will be a revelation.
In a land that invented the gift of the gab, Terry is in his element as he heads out west in the company of his lugubrious driver Dave. En route to the house he grew up in, he discovers a 'moving' statue of the Virgin Mary, suffers bad weather on the Ring of Kerry, and in Tralee he recalls Ireland's Loveliest Ladies competition, as he asks himself what it means to be Irish today.

37:21

Ireland Trip 2015

A video recapping our trip to Ireland. Captures moments at cities and sites such as Dubli...

A Crone Woods to Djouce Circuit. 21/9/17.

Around 9.5 miles of walking from the car-park at Crone to the 733m summit of Djouce, one of the WicklowHills in Eire, and back.
Up through woods on the Wicklow Way, with great views of Powerscourt Waterfall shortly after, the walker is soon crossing the DargleRiver, near its source, and out into open countryside. There are some wonderful views of the Wicklow coastline and the Irish Sea, prior to the steep ascent of Djouce, which affords even better views of the same, plus those of Lough Tay and the mountains further south.
The walk back was the same, until RideRock, where the walker took another path towards the northern flank of Maulin. Thereafter, it was a different forest path back to the car park.
A very decent walk, aided and abetted by some wonderful weather that was not forecast! With hindsight, it would have been better to include the walk over Maulin, rather than the way it was done today. You live and learn!
N.B. Some wind interference on commentary.

52:08

Winning Streak (RTÉ) - 2001

An episode of RTÉ's National Lottery game show, presented by Derek Mooney. The show gave a...

Winning Streak (RTÉ) - 2001

An episode of RTÉ's National Lottery game show, presented by Derek Mooney. The show gave away thousands of pounds in cash, cars and holidays. This episode from 2001 would almost certainly have been one of the last shows that gave their money away in Pounds (or Punts), because the following year saw the start of the Euro as official Eire currency. ALL RELEVANTCOPYRIGHTS ACKNOWLEDGED.

parkrun Bere Island #126 24/12/16

Saturday 24th December 2016
parkrun on Bere Island, County Cork, Ireland.
A particularly interesting parkrun. It involves taking the ferry from Castletown to Bere Island, then a minibus to the start. There are changing facilities at the football club clubhouse. The hilly course has spectacular views to the Sheep's Head Peninsular & Hungry Hill across the wild Atlantic. Drinks are provided at the finish and showers are available in the changing rooms. Afterwards, everybody walks down to Bere Island BakeHouse (in the rear of Murphy's Pub) for hot drinks & cakes. Finally the minibus takes you back to the ferry which then takes you back to Castletown.
The combined return fare on the ferry and minibus is €10.

Given the worsening impacts of global climate change, there is now serious scientific concern that humanity either already has, or shortly will, exceed “safe” concentrations (accumulations) of greenhouse gases (GHGs) in the atmosphere. While the severity of the danger has been recognised in the temperature rise goals now enshrined in the Paris Agreement, the practical consequences have not yet been acknowledged in national or EU energy decarbonisation policies.
There is now a pressing need to understand the potential scope (if any) for technological CO2 removal, and the scale and speed at which it might be achieved: that is, for the deployment of so-called “negative emissions technologies” (NETs).
IE-NETs is a two year research project, funded by the Environmental Protection Agency of Ireland (EPA) to provide a preliminary assessment of the potential scale, speed and reliability of negative emissions technology deployment that could be achieved in Ireland.

To Have And To Hold

Too da looIt's only three weeks,Hey I know I love youAnd time will tell us that our love is trueYou're the love of my lifetimeTo have and to holdYou're the best of this centuryMaybe even historyYou're mine to have and to holdWait and see.I'll write a story about you and me.About our lives:A romantic comedy.But then along came the rainFull of loneliness and painI won't be gone for too longBut when a minute lasts a lifetime,

It turns out that a theory explaining how we might detect parallel universes and prediction for the end of the world was proposed and completed by physicist Stephen Hawking shortly before he died ... &nbsp;. According to reports, the work predicts that the universe would eventually end when stars run out of energy ... ....

Britain’s Royal Astronomical Society announced Monday that an object called 1I/2017 (‘Oumuamua) – the first confirmed asteroid known to have journeyed here from outside our solar system – most likely came from from a binary star system, or two stars orbiting a common center of gravity, EarthSky reported ... They looked at how common these star systems are in the galaxy ... ....

In another blow to the Trump administration Monday, the US Supreme Court decided Arizona must continue to issue state driver’s licenses to so-called Dreamer immigrants and refused to hear an effort by the state to challenge the Obama-era program that protects hundreds of thousands of young adults brought into the country illegally as children, Reuters reported ... – WN.com. Jack Durschlag....

Uber announced on Monday that it was pulling all of its self-driving cars from public roads in Arizona and San Francisco, Toronto, and Pittsburgh after a female pedestrian was reportedly killed after being struck by an autonomous Uber vehicle in Tempe, according to The Verge.&nbsp; ... “We are fully cooperating with local authorities in their investigation of this incident.” ... "Some incredibly sad news out of Arizona....

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Former senior BBC weatherman Bill Giles has described the corporation’s new-look weather forecasts as “disappointing as a downpour in high summer” ... New graphics – which were previously provided by MetraWeather – include new map projections and a globe graphic that allows presenters to move around the world to display weather-related data. The old weather maps were better, more fit for purpose......

The NationalWeatherService has a WinterWeather Advisory in effect from 6 a.m ...WeatherTravel and Transportation Closings and Delays. Weather. After a sun-filled Monday, two waves of winter weather are expected to cast a shadow during the first week of spring in the D.C ... The National Weather Service’s Winter Weather Advisory means “periods of snow, sleet or freezing rain will cause travel difficulties” on Tuesday....

A one-two punch of wintry weather systems is forecast to move into the region for the first day of spring, starting with a wintry mix late Monday night into early Tuesday, and bringing potentially heavy snowfall by Wednesday night ... A winter weather advisory is in effect in areas north and west of Baltimore throughout the day Tuesday ... In March, the ground is warmer,” weather service meteorologist IshaRenta said ... Liveweather....

The bulk of the dangerous, wind-driven snow and sleet is expected to wallop New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware and parts of eastern Pennsylvania before heading off to Nantucket early Thursday, the NationalWeatherService said ... 1st day of spring brings rain, maybe snow WeatherNewsStorm system could bring snow to DC region Weather News Where is spring? Snow possible for the DC area this week Weather News....

A tornado watch has been issued by the NationalWeatherService until 4 a.m. Severe thunderstorms are expected to hit Rome this afternoon and through the night and early Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service....

A weather system was to bring a chance of rain — and snow — to eastern Nebraska and southwest Iowa on Tuesday ... For the Omaha and Lincoln areas, any snow accumulation was expected to total less than 1 inch, the NationalWeatherService office in Valley said ... Wednesday will be a weather improvement — mostly sunny skies with a high in the lower 50s ... Overnight lows will be in the mid-30s to lower 40s, the weather service said....

ATLANTA (AP) — The Latest on the threat of severe weather across the Southeast (all times local). ... The University of Alabama planned to suspend normal operations Monday evening because of a severe weather threat ...State officials are warning residents in northern Alabama to brace for severe weather Monday evening ... This is the first severe weather to hit the state this year....